Chapter 154 - . Sell China
12 Hours After
Translator: Khan
Editor: Aelryinth
February 2021. As usual, I sat in the presidentâs office and watched the monitor. When it rang, I picked up the ringing phone right away. I could hear Secretary Parkâs voice. âWeâre all here, boss.â
I got up from my seat, fixed my jacket and left the office. Secretary Park accompanied me. Instead of taking the elevator, we went down just one floor using the emergency stairs. Right below the presidentâs office was the conference room. I walked in and said to Secretary Park, âWhat about wiretaps or anything?â
âIâve checked everything.â
âYes. Good job.â I entered the conference room with that remark. Inside the conference room, four people were standing waiting for me: Vice President Jang, Director Kim, Director Chung, and Director Kang. The four people had all been the core of the company that had been supporting me since the founding of Invictus Investment. They bent their heads to me and greeted me, âAre you here, boss?â
I sat in the chiefâs seat at the end of the table, gesturing at the same time. âSit down, please.â
The four executives sat down at my instruction. I then winked at Secretary Park and he came forward and said, âBefore we start the meeting, Vice President Jang and all the directors, please take out your cell phones and give them to me.â
Vice President Jang and the directors looked up at Secretary Park and then at me. I nodded. They rummaged through their pants and took out their cell phones.
âPlease understand. Todayâs meeting is a serious matter, so I have to pay special attention to security. Itâs not that I donât trust you, but the smartphones can be used deceptively. Iâll return your cell phones right after the meeting.â
As I spoke, four people bent their heads. Secretary Park took them one by one, bowed to me and left the main conference room. Now there were only five people left in the big conference room, including me. I took a look at the left and right sides. Vice President Jang and Director Chung on the right, and Director Kim and Director Kang on the left, all looking at me in a slightly nervous state. It was the first time since the company had been founded that key members were suddenly called in and their cell phones taken.
âAhem.â Once I cleared my throat, I said to them, âThe reason I asked you to come todayâ¦â Naturally, all four peopleâs eyes were on me.
âStarting today, Iâm making a bet on the companyâs best fortune. If we win here, Invictus Investment will be a company that will be ranked one of the nationâs top businesses, but if we fail here, weâll probably have to close.â
Someone gulped. I continued carefully. âThe biggest issue of our time, I think, is the hegemonic war between the United States and China. This is a huge, invisible war, fighting over the hegemony of the world. 2018 was three years ago. I think thatâs where Donald Trump started the U.S.-China trade war when he started imposing tariffs on China. And of course, at the time, it looked like it was being properly sutured, expanding imports of U.S. products, removing state subsidies from several companies and strengthening the yuan. China accepted U.S. demands.â
They were listening to me in silence. I went on, âHowever, I think the end of the negotiations was not the end of the U.S. war with China, but the beginning of the attack. Letâs think of Japan in the 1980s. The Plaza Accord forced the yen to appreciate, but since then, Japan has been on a downward spiral, losing price competitiveness at high exchange rates. The merchandise that used to be selling well did not.
âIn the meantime, Korea, which had relatively low exchange rates, took advantage of the opportunity to take the position of Japan and achieved tremendous growth. However, Korea fell into the same situation as Japan in the 2010s. Chinaâs low-cost workforce and low-exchange rates have put all of Koreaâs major industries at risk, whether itâs consumer electronics, shipbuilding, IT or chemicals.â
As I talked, all of them nodded. Up to this point, it was something that anyone in the investment industry could find in textbooks.
âTwo years ago, in 2019, China ended up appreciating the yuan under pressure from the U.S. That temporarily led to Chinaâs short-term bull run, with its purchasing power increasing and its stock prices rising. But so did Japanâs. Even after the Plaza Accord, Japan also had a boom for several years. Was that not so?â
Vice President Jang agreed here. âYes, sir, it was.â
âBut now China is going through the same situation. The forced appreciation of the yuan seems to have improved the purchasing power of the people, but exports are worsening. In the midst, the debt for the high growth rate that theyâve been using to support their growth is holding back. If Chinaâs economy is shaken a little bit here, itâs going to be attacked by international speculators, including hedge funds in the U.S., with the approval of the U.S. government.â
At my words, Director Chung told me, âBut Mr. President, the hypothesis is problematic. Americaâs imports and Chinaâs exports⦠If itâs enough to shake the system⦠even if the U.S. were to hit China, they would suffer a lot too.â
I nodded. It usually came as a rebuttal to this hypothesis. âThereâs a saying that you get a big victory instead of losing a small amount of money. I think the U.S. will make enough sacrifices to maintain its global hegemony, because itâs China. Letâs think of Japan, which went through the same thing. Japan has no nuclear weapons, and has little power but its navy to protect its island. Even the U.S. Pacific Fleet is stationed there. In fact, the U.S. allowed Japan to live together. Japan hasnât attacked the U.S. since the Pearl Harbor air strike in World War II.â
I tapped the table twice and carried on my words. âBut China is different, and it is no wonder. China is a country with great potential. They have a huge population and a great zeal for education⦠and they have nuclear weapons. Like the former Soviet Union, they can be a competitor, challenging American hegemony. They were actually going to do that. However, I donât think the U.S. will tolerate that.â
Jang added to my remarks. âThatâs what I think. If the U.S. is looking for a country that can make things at a really low price, thereâs another alternative besides China. In the same Pacific region, thereâs Indonesia with the worldâs fourth-largest population, and thereâs India, a little bit further, going beyond China to the top of the population. China is too big to grow together. I think the U.S. could break the momentum down here.â
I continued, clasping my hands here. âLooking back, thereâs been a lot of strange signs in the Chinese economy lately. Jiwoo Entertainment, which we acquired, was one such case. A large Chinese company bought a Korean company at a high price and sold it in a hurry. The company had no problem at all. Thereâs been a little bit more of that strange thing going on lately, so⦠I think the collapse is not far off. I have a hunch thatâ¦â
Director Kang blurted out, his eyes narrowed, âThe collapse?â
âYes. The collapse. Chinese companies have blocked it with debt, but they may eventually go bankrupt, from small companies to big ones. Then thereâs going to be a problem for the banks, too. I think thatâs going to create a credit crunch, and thatâs going to cause the yuan to fall steeply. China will go through the same foreign exchange crisis as our country did in the IMF, but the United States will turn its eyes. China will not breathe comfortably for years.â
Director Kang told me, âMr. President, isnât it dangerous for our country, too? Our country has become more dependent on China than the U.S. in recent years.â
I nodded. âOf course. Our country will also have a big crisis.â
âThen letâs move the money to safe assetsâ¦â When he said that, he stopped talking. He was the one who had turned our Invictus Investmentâs cash into gold and silverâ¦
I smiled. âThatâs what Vice President Jang has been doing since the middle of last year; selling your company, reducing investment, transferring assets to safe assets. I was going to do this much and just watch, staying away from the casino table for a while. But as time went by, I was more and more convinced. Iâm sure the crisis in Chinaâs economy is just around the corner. So, I started thinking, not just about curling up, but about being aggressive.â
It was an honest remark. After the news I had seen half a year ago when I was traveling abroad, news about China continued to pour in from the âEconomyâ and âWorldâ categories.
I put my hands flat and came to the point. âListen carefully. In the next few months, our company will short sell the yuan and China. I am going to buy asset puts in China, regardless of whether it is in the U.S., Singapore, Hong Kong, or it is direct foreign exchange investment in the FX market. We will invest all of five billion dollars that we have in cash.â
As I spoke, the directors, as well as Vice President Jang, were stunned.
âAll five billion dollars in cash?â
I answered calmly, âYes.â
Vice President Jang also spoke up cautiously. âBoss, isnât that too dangerous?â
Director Kang also said, âThere is a saying that even God doesnât know the exchange rate. Boss, youâre planning too risky an investment.â
Director Chung joined the group. âThe yen has stabilized since the Plaza Accord. Will the yuan fall like that?â
I told him stories based on what I had seen in the future news. âThe yen was able to hold out because the U.S. allowed Japan to live together with them. They let them live through the lost thirty years, and then they went through a painful deflation. But China is different. The U.S. thinks of China as a real threat. So itâs probably going to lead to a state bankruptcy. They will take away its G2 status and will not let it recover for years at the same time.â
As I spoke, Director Chung couldnât object any more. I talked about more future knowledge here. âIf we think about the International Monetary Fund (IMF), we can see that our country was also raised by the U.S. and died by the U.S. We gained weight rapidly when the foreign exchange came in, but was almost twisted to death when it escaped. But then they saved our countryâs life. For the U.S., Korea is a good listener. If the sheep is mild, the owner simply cuts the wool and raises it again. But what if the sheep grows too big? And what if it wants to attack its master? The owner might kill the sheep that grew too big. I think thatâs whatâs going to happen.â
At what I said, Vice President Jang and the directors only rolled their eyes at each other and couldnât speak any more. They couldnât disobey me in the first place. Our company never received any investments from anyone. There was no other shareholder or such person to oppose my decision.
I spoke clearly here, âSell China, that is the keynote of our company this year. You know that; please move on it!ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om